Do subjective or objective cognitive measures better predict social network type among older adults?

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Date
2022
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American English
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Taylor & Francis
Abstract

A large literature highlights the link between cognitive function and social networks in later life. Yet there remains uncertainty about the factors driving this relationship. In the present study, we use measures of subjective cognitive decline and clinical cognitive assessments on a sample of older adults to investigate whether the relationship between cognitive function and social networks is driven by psychosocial factors. We found a consistent link between clinical cognitive assessments and social network type, but no association between subjective concerns of cognitive decline and networks. Participants who exhibited signs of clinical cognitive impairment were more likely to have restricted networks (i.e., smaller networks consisting of fewer contacts, more interconnectivity, and less social diversity) compared to their cognitively normal counterparts, regardless of subjective measures of cognitive decline—both from the participant’s perspective and study partner’s perspective. These findings suggest that neither cognitively impaired older adults nor their network members appear to consciously dissolve social ties on the basis of perceived cognitive decline. However, it remains unclear whether the association between clinical cognitive impairment and social network type indicates the protective nature of social networks against cognitive decline or a subconscious process leading to social contraction.

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Roth AR, Peng S, Coleman ME, Apostolova LG, Perry BL. Do subjective or objective cognitive measures better predict social network type among older adults?. Biodemography Soc Biol. 2022;67(1):84-97. doi:10.1080/19485565.2022.2052711
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Biodemography and Social Biology
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PMC
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